Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Born is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Benjamin Born.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Correlated structural kinetics and retarded solvent dynamics at the metalloprotease active site.

Moran Grossman; Benjamin Born; Matthias Heyden; Dmitry Tworowski; Gregg B. Fields; Irit Sagi; Martina Havenith

Solvent dynamics can play a major role in enzyme activity, but obtaining an accurate, quantitative picture of solvent activity during catalysis is quite challenging. Here, we combine terahertz spectroscopy and X-ray absorption analyses to measure changes in the coupled water-protein motions during peptide hydrolysis by a zinc-dependent human metalloprotease. These changes were tightly correlated with rearrangements at the active site during the formation of productive enzyme-substrate intermediates and were different from those in an enzyme–inhibitor complex. Molecular dynamics simulations showed a steep gradient of fast-to-slow coupled protein-water motions around the protein, active site and substrate. Our results show that water retardation occurs before formation of the functional Michaelis complex. We propose that the observed gradient of coupled protein-water motions may assist enzyme-substrate interactions through water-polarizing mechanisms that are remotely mediated by the catalytic metal ion and the enzyme active site.


Faraday Discussions | 2009

The terahertz dance of water with the proteins: the effect of protein flexibility on the dynamical hydration shell of ubiquitin.

Benjamin Born; Seung Joong Kim; Simon Ebbinghaus; Martin Gruebele; Martina Havenith

The role of water in the functioning of proteins has been a hot topic over the years. We use terahertz (THz) spectroscopy as an experimental tool to probe the protein-induced fast solvation dynamics of ubiquitin. In order to investigate the effect of protein flexibility on the changes in the solvation dynamics, we have measured the concentration-dependent THz absorption of several site-specific ubiquitin mutants. The observed non-linear dependence of absorption on concentration is a signature of a long-range hydration shell with properties distinct from bulk water. We determined a dynamical hydration shell of a thickness of at least 18 A on the protein surface. This exceeds the static hydration layer as it is typically observed by scattering methods (3 A) by far. We also conclude that any increase in flexibility obtained by side-chain truncations that decrease the structural rigidity of the protein results in more bulk-like behaviour of the dynamical hydration shell. Furthermore, our THz measurements show that a single phenylalanine-to-tryptophan substitution to introduce a fluorescent marker leads to measurable changes in the solvation dynamics.


Angewandte Chemie | 2008

Real‐Time Detection of Protein–Water Dynamics upon Protein Folding by Terahertz Absorption Spectroscopy

Seung Joong Kim; Benjamin Born; Martina Havenith; Martin Gruebele

Recently,therehasbeenagrowinginterestinprobingnotjustthe dynamics of self-assembling macromolecules but thedynamicsoftheirsolvationshellsaswell.Dielectric,Raman,fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopies, neutron scattering,and crystallography all provide insights, but only terahertzabsorption spectroscopy (wavelength range 0.1–1mm;1THz=1ps


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Protein Stabilization by Macromolecular Crowding through Enthalpy Rather Than Entropy

Michael Senske; Lisa Törk; Benjamin Born; Martina Havenith; Christian Herrmann; Simon Ebbinghaus

The interior of the cell is a densely crowded environment in which protein stability is affected differently than in dilute solution. Macromolecular crowding is commonly understood in terms of an entropic volume exclusion effect based on hardcore repulsions among the macromolecules. We studied the thermal unfolding of ubiquitin in the presence of different cosolutes (glucose, dextran, poly(ethylene glycol), KCl, urea). Our results show that for a correct dissection of the cosolute-induced changes of the free energy into its enthalpic and entropic contributions, the temperature dependence of the heat capacity change needs to be explicitly taken into account. In contrast to the prediction by the excluded volume theory, we observed an enthalpic stabilization and an entropic destabilization for glucose, dextran, and poly(ethylene glycol). The enthalpic stabilization mechanism induced by the macromolecular crowder dextran was similar to the enthalpic stabilization mechanism of its monomeric building block glucose. In the case of poly(ethylene glycol), entropy is dominating over enthalpy leading to an overall destabilization. We propose a new model to classify cosolute effects in terms of their enthalpic contributions to protein stability.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Solvation Dynamics of Model Peptides Probed by Terahertz Spectroscopy. Observation of the Onset of Collective Network Motions

Benjamin Born; Hermann Weingärtner; Erik Bründermann; Martina Havenith

We have studied the solvation of model peptides at low hydration levels by terahertz absorption spectroscopy. We have recorded the concentration-dependent terahertz absorption coefficients of N-acetyl-glycine-amide (NAGA), N-acetyl-glycine-methylamide (NAGMA), N-acetyl-leucine-amide (NALA), N-acetyl-leucine-methylamide (NALMA), and N-acetyl-tryptophan-amide (NATA) in aqueous solution. We find a dramatic decrease in the THz absorption, if the number of water molecules per solute is less than 18-20. This change is taken as a signature for the breakdown of peptide-water network motions, which supports the hypothesis that a minimum number of hydration waters is required to activate these motions. This is well below a monolayer coverage of the model peptides. It is interesting to note that the required hydration level corresponds to the number of water molecules which are required for biological functionality.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Rattling in the Cage: Ions as Probes of Sub-picosecond Water Network Dynamics

Diedrich A. Schmidt; Özgür Birer; Stefan Funkner; Benjamin Born; Gerhard Schwaab; David M. Leitner; Martina Havenith

We present terahertz (THz) measurements of salt solutions that shed new light on the controversy over whether salts act as kosmotropes (structure makers) or chaotropes (structure breakers), which enhance or reduce the solvent order, respectively. We have carried out precise measurements of the concentration-dependent THz absorption coefficient of 15 solvated alkali halide salts around 85 cm(-1) (2.5 THz). In addition, we recorded overview spectra between 30 and 300 cm(-1) using a THz Fourier transform spectrometer for six alkali halides. For all solutions we found a linear increase of THz absorption compared to pure water (THz excess) with increasing solute concentration. These results suggest that the ions may be treated as simple defects in an H-bond network. They therefore cannot be characterized as either kosmotropes or chaotropes. Below 200 cm(-1), the observed THz excess of all salts can be described by a linear superposition of the water absorption and an additional absorption that is attributed to a rattling motion of the ions within the water network. By providing a comprehensive set of data for different salt solutions, we find that the solutions can all be very well described by a model that includes damped harmonic oscillations of the anions and cations within the water network. We find this model predicts the main features of THz spectra for a variety of salt solutions. The assumption of the existence of these ion rattling motions on sub-picosecond time scales is supported by THz Fourier transform spectroscopy of six alkali halides. Above 200 cm(-1) the excess is interpreted in terms of a change in the wing of the water network librational mode. Accompanying molecular dynamics simulations using the TIP3P water model support our conclusion and show that the fast sub-picosecond motions of the ions and their surroundings are almost decoupled. These findings provide a complete description of the solute-induced changes in the THz solvation dynamics for the investigated salts. Our results show that THz spectroscopy is a powerful experimental tool to establish a new view on the contributions of anions and cations to the structuring of water.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Antifreeze Glycoprotein Activity Correlates with Long-Range Protein−Water Dynamics

Simon Ebbinghaus; Konrad Meister; Benjamin Born; Arthur L. DeVries; Martin Gruebele; Martina Havenith

Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) and antifreeze glycoproteins (AFGPs) enable the survival of organisms living in subfreezing habitats and serve as preservatives. Although their function is known, the underlying molecular mechanism was not understood. Mutagenesis experiments questioned the previous assumption of hydrogen bonding as the dominant mechanism. We use terahertz spectroscopy to show that antifreeze activity is directly correlated with long-range collective hydration dynamics. Our results provide evidence for a new model of how AFGPs prevent water from freezing. We suggest that antifreeze activity may be induced because the AFGP perturbs the aqueous solvent over long distances. Retarded water dynamics in the large hydration shell does not favor freezing. The complexation of the carbohydrate cis-hydroxyl groups by borate suppresses the long-range hydration shell detected by terahertz absorption. The hydration dynamics shift toward bulk water behavior strongly reduces the AFGP antifreeze activity, further supporting our model.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Enzymatic turnover of macromolecules generates long-lasting protein–water-coupled motions beyond reaction steady state

Jessica Dielmann-Gessner; Moran Grossman; Valeria Conti Nibali; Benjamin Born; Inna Solomonov; Gregg B. Fields; Martina Havenith; Irit Sagi

Significance The solvent in biological reactions plays an active role in protein function; however, correlating solvation dynamics with specific biological scenarios remains a scientific challenge. Here, we followed time-dependent changes in solvation dynamics using terahertz absorption spectroscopy during proteolysis of collagen substrates by a metalloproteinase. Unexpectedly, we revealed that solvation dynamics do not follow the traditional enzymatic steady-state kinetic theory but generate long-lasting protein–water-coupled motions that last longer than a single catalytic cycle and are substrate-specific. These prolonged solvation dynamics contribute to the net enzyme reactivity impacting substrate binding, positional catalysis, and product release. The main focus of enzymology is on the enzyme rates, substrate structures, and reactivity, whereas the role of solvent dynamics in mediating the biological reaction is often left aside owing to its complex molecular behavior. We used integrated X-ray– and terahertz- based time-resolved spectroscopic tools to study protein–water dynamics during proteolysis of collagen-like substrates by a matrix metalloproteinase. We show equilibration of structural kinetic transitions in the millisecond timescale during degradation of the two model substrates collagen and gelatin, which have different supersecondary structure and flexibility. Unexpectedly, the detected changes in collective enzyme–substrate–water-coupled motions persisted well beyond steady state for both substrates while displaying substrate-specific behaviors. Molecular dynamics simulations further showed that a hydration funnel (i.e., a gradient in retardation of hydrogen bond (HB) dynamics toward the active site) is substrate-dependent, exhibiting a steeper gradient for the more complex enzyme–collagen system. The long-lasting changes in protein–water dynamics reflect a collection of local energetic equilibrium states specifically formed during substrate conversion. Thus, the observed long-lasting water dynamics contribute to the net enzyme reactivity, impacting substrate binding, positional catalysis, and product release.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Zn2+-Aβ40 Complexes Form Metastable Quasi-spherical Oligomers That Are Cytotoxic to Cultured Hippocampal Neurons

Inna Solomonov; Eduard Korkotian; Benjamin Born; Yishay Feldman; Arkady Bitler; Farid Rahimi; Huiyuan Li; Gal Bitan; Irit Sagi

Background: The mechanism by which interaction between Aβ and Zn2+ induces Aβ aggregation and cell toxicity is elusive. Results: Zn2+ and Aβ40 form metastable neurotoxic oligomers. Conclusion: Aβ40 binding to Zn2+ leads to formation of small neurotoxic oligomers that become benign upon further self-assembly. Significance: We provide a structure-function analysis of Zn2+-stabilized Aβ40, a neurotoxic species that may contribute to the pathology in AD. The roles of metal ions in promoting amyloid β-protein (Aβ) oligomerization associated with Alzheimer disease are increasingly recognized. However, the detailed structures dictating toxicity remain elusive for Aβ oligomers stabilized by metal ions. Here, we show that small Zn2+-bound Aβ1–40 (Zn2+-Aβ40) oligomers formed in cell culture medium exhibit quasi-spherical structures similar to native amylospheroids isolated recently from Alzheimer disease patients. These quasi-spherical Zn2+-Aβ40 oligomers irreversibly inhibit spontaneous neuronal activity and cause massive cell death in primary hippocampal neurons. Spectroscopic and x-ray diffraction structural analyses indicate that despite their non-fibrillar morphology, the metastable Zn2+-Aβ40 oligomers are rich in β-sheet and cross-β structures. Thus, Zn2+ promotes Aβ40 neurotoxicity by structural organization mechanisms mediated by coordination chemistry.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Water Dynamics from THz Spectroscopy Reveal the Locus of a Liquid–Liquid Binodal Limit in Aqueous CaCO 3 Solutions

Federico Sebastiani; Stefan L. P. Wolf; Benjamin Born; Trung Quan Luong; Helmut Cölfen; Denis Gebauer; Martina Havenith

Many phenomena depend on CaCO3 nucleation where the role of water remains enigmatic. Changes in THz absorption during the early stages of CaCO3 nucleation evidence altered coupled motions of hydrated calcium and carbonate ions. The direct link between these changes and the continuous development of the ion activity product reveals the locus of a liquid-liquid binodal limit. The data strongly suggest that proto-structured amorphous CaCO3 forms through solidification of initially liquid precursors. Furthermore, polycarboxylates, which stabilize liquid precursors of CaCO3 , significantly enhance the kinetic stability of the metastable liquid-liquid state, but they do not affect the locus of the binodal limit. The importance of water network dynamics in phase separation mechanisms can be understood based on the notions of the pre-nucleation cluster pathway, and is likely to be more general for aqueous systems.

Collaboration


Dive into the Benjamin Born's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irit Sagi

Weizmann Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge